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The Register » Hardware » Comments on ‘HPC bar goes lower and wider’Parallel computing pitches at the mainstreamPublished Wednesday 27th June 2007 15:28 GMT
What about the memoryBy Stephen Booth
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 16:18 GMT
All the really big HPC systems on the top-500 have only a couple of cores per node. Beyond that and memory bandwidth saturates. For HPC type applications most of the parallelism comes from large node counts. Unfortunatly using multiple nodes is much harder than multi-threading. In my opinion very large core counts will only work for niche applications unless we start to see some inovation in memory system design but the memory manufactures seem only to be interested in making larger chips of the same old basic types rather than investing in significantly new technologies. Whatever happened to rambus? Now That's You've Got All Those Cores....By Anonymous Coward
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 16:37 GMT
.. beware geeks bearing parallelizing compilers. They're still generally a poor substitute for talented software engineers who know parallel algorithms and can cut good code. Vendors will nevetheless swear your developers won't have to expand their body of knowledge (much.) Just like "if you know C, you know C++." Only more so. The period for commenting on this story has finished |
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